1 Steps Against Forgetfulness

1 Steps Against Forgetfulness

Critical Studies in Improvisation / Études critiques en improvisation, Vol 4, No 1 (2008) Notes and Opinions Steps Against Forgetfulness (Six of Them)1 Alain Derbez 1. To generate a chronological table can be a demanding work. Facts and certainty may become suspicious. Why should we include these dates? Why not these others? What events started on this particular day that are today part of an ephemeris? What was not included? Why do we commemorate and why does someone need us to forget, or simply not to register, not to inform? Why does anyone want us to contribute daily with our Nothingness tasks, to build the visible monument to forgetfulness that from the Central Plaza, from the highest altar and mall, ejects replicas directly to our home niches in front of which we are kneeling without even noticing when we bent our knees? (Staring at a monitor, René Descartes could have said, yawning nowadays: “I think . not . thank you.”) 2. No, I don’t yet want to produce a chronological table. I don’t want to choose those facts, those dates. Right now what I want to do is to write a sonnet in my language and I’ll name it “Suave es el Jazz.” Yo que siempre toque sin partitura Desnudo improvisando en cualquier foro Alzo hoy la voz a la mitad de un coro Y narro con detalle la aventura Suave es el jazz desde esta tierra dura Fuerte también como ha de serlo el oro Indio, negro, español, latino, moro De mestiza raíz, esto es muy pura El tiempo de mi patria es sincopado Lo que se mira se oye en sus matices Arcoiris, volcán, sonido alado Ya celestial festín de meretrices O diabólico solo consagrado Que cuenta al saxofón sus cicatrices 3. Or maybe, yes. Let us name dates: The day in which the then Mexican President arrived—he thought—at his transcendental moment, crossing the line separating simple power from immortality; the crucial date in which his mere name would inscribe the Old México, survivor of colonial days when that endless territory was known as the New Spain, anticipating the 21st Century by setting in motion the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) together with powers such as Canada and the US (because, ladies and gentlemen, Mexico—he could have said with a good Harvard pronunciation—Mexico is North America); that same day, that very same morning in January, the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional, (indigenous guerrillas, as indigenous as were the Tlaxcalteca Xicoténcatl, battling Hernán Cortés’ odd, white, bearded hordes, that is, not gods), shot against the military garrison in Chiapas (of all places, Chiapas). This that happened in 1519 also happened in the first dawn of 1994. Five centuries had elapsed and circumstances were basically the same: surviving natives enduring the miserable conditions imposed by whites and their governments and economical systems. Seven years before, April 14 of 1987, the Mexican jazz pianist Olivia Revueltas, daughter of the militant writer José, niece of the composer Silvestre, started a hunger strike in solidarity. There was, she tells me from her self-imposed exile in the US: an indigenous man who had already been on a hunger strike for more than 35 days, and was in a terrible condition. Nobody paid attention to these peasants camping on the Plaza Mayor, facing the cathedral and the National Government Palace. It was inhuman to witness these people with no media reporting on their condition. The night I started my hunger strike I called my sister Andrea from the Zócalo. Considering my life in danger, she connected with the press in the hopes of raising awareness and promptly resolving the situation. The next morning the media were there. It may sound presumptuous, but my participation 1 Critical Studies in Improvisation / Études critiques en improvisation, Vol 4, No 1 (2008) prompted the public’s attention and eventually the peasants were received by the then President Miguel de la Madrid. Was there—somebody could now ask—a solution? (Revueltas, Personal) Olivia Revueltas, jazz pianist, female presence in Mexican jazz, left Mexico a year later on a significant date: October 2, 1988. Twenty years since the students’ massacre in Tlatelolco, when Gustavo Díaz Ordaz was the acting President. “I deliberately chose this date as a protestation,” says Olivia, “I abandoned the country in face of the constant, continuous injustice” (Revueltas, Personal). As a result of another fraud in the elections, Carlos Salinas de Gortari had won the Presidency. This was in 1988, almost six years before the Zapatista rebellion, almost six years before the NAFTA dream awakened into reality, Mexican reality. 4. Of other dates I can write, while I play one of the two CDs that Olivia Revueltas recorded in the US with the trio where the late Billy Higgins played the drums (the first two recordings in Olivia’s career, by the way). I reminisce of that Sunday in May 1989 and the Mexican sax player Henry West, who introduced Mexico to free-jazz in the 1970s, who traveled all over the country playing with Don Cherry, (yes, the same Don Cherry we opened our ears and eyes to with Ornette Coleman with Gato, with Abdullah Ibrahim, with Old and New Dreams), Henry West. And with Cherry and West, the pianist Ana Ruiz and the percussionist Robert Mann played free jazz in prisons, hospitals, schools, and the huge National Auditorium. A few hours after a Mexican singer on local TV interpreted one more version of Gershwin’s “Summertime” on a Saturday night West left the country, tired of the constant hurdles. He was so sick of the environment that he left his instrument behind after decades of active involvement playing, recording, teaching and educating the public, creating the audiences, on free and collective improvisation. As a resident in the US he devoted his time not to the music he had been trained to play in Berklee, Massachusetts, not to the acting career he had pursued in England, nor even to playing again with Terry Riley, as he did when an in-ocean experiment was conducted by John Lilly to communicate with dolphins using music, but to computing! He exchanged the Indian harmonium that he took before blowing the sax with his amazing circular breathing, his stage domain, his chants and assorted harmonies, for a personal computer keyboard somewhere in an office in Arizona. Allow me to introduce a few more facts in order to find a possible ephemeris. In the middle of the 19th Century, a black-Creole family from New Orleans, led by Thomas Louis Marcos Tio, tried its colonizing fortune south of the border in the state of Veracruz. However the Tios only made it to Tamaulipas. Years later, a couple of Mexican youngsters, born in Tampico, went to Louisiana where they actively participated in the music scene as clarinet players; they were Lorenzo and Luis Tio. Their participation in the scene was acknowledged by the Excelsior Brand Band playing in the Cotton Fair in the 1880s, where they alternated with the military band representing Mexico, and the Currier Band from Cincinatti, Ohio. Tom Bethell, in his book George Lewis, jazzista de Nueva Orleans writes about the Mexican clarinet player, Lorenzo, who participated in the Cotton Fair, whose classical style was so influential that he is considered as the person who introduced the clarinet to jazz ensembles, and who by the end of the 19th century abandoned the city never to return. W.C. Handy writes in his autobiography that Lorenzo Tio was the “first of the top-notch clarinetists of our race” (68). On June 10, 1908 Lorenzo Tio died in New Orleans wanting to return to Mexico. Almost a century later, in 2003, Pat Metheny’s group, including the Mexican percussionist Antonio Sánchez, won a Grammy award and a group of jazz players from the country south of the Rio Bravo would play that Fall in the brand new jazz-dedicated building in Lincoln Center in New York City. Four years later the painter and musician Jazzamoart, plastic improviser with the Sonora Onosón, and illustrator/designer of the cover of the book El jazz en Mexico, datos para una historia, lent a painting for the 2007 Guelph Jazz Festival, and Antonio Sánchez presented his first CD in New York as a band leader, Migration. Not a better name could have been chosen for it now that a wall is constructed on the Mexico-U.S border and the NAFTA leaders meet in Canada for the sake of meeting. In the 1920s, a group of classical musicians getting ready to celebrate Beethoven’s birthday anniversary, sent a request to Mexico City’s mayor asking him “to ban, at least for a week, blowing car horns and public jazz performances.” Around that time, the minister of Public Education, according to his memoirs, prohibited bull fights as well as playing jazz since he considered both activities utterly uncivil: savage. Four years later, a Catholic fanatic murdered Alvaro Obregón, the then presidential candidate, while the band played a waltz. The band’s conductor had declared to the press “jazz is an infamous music written with the feet for the feet.” This, however, didn’t prevent him a few months later from performing jazz since “that is—he explained—the people’s preference.” That was during the twenties of the twentieth century. Today, in the 21st century, eleven years have elapsed since a group of indigenous people were murdered in Acteal (once again, Chiapas!) and ten years have passed since the 2 Critical Studies in Improvisation / Études critiques en improvisation, Vol 4, No 1 (2008) Mexican clarinetist Marcos Miranda registered this tragedy recording, after “Little Boy visits Hiroshima,” “Acteal” on his disc Dueto with the bassist Fernando Zapata.

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